These statistics really mean nothing. It is such an obvious observation that rich people control most of the wealth. And, so what.

There is a popular idea in the world’s consciousness that there is a fixed amount of wealth and that the poor are denied access to it because of greedy rich people. As the author of the above article stated:

Still, the data supports a trend we have been seeing for years: the rise of the global, winner-take-all (or most) economy.

That is certainly true in non-capitalistic societies where the power of the state is used to control the masses for the benefit of a few oligarchs. Most of these countries are commodity or food exporters ruled by oligarchs or dictators. Wealth is mostly stolen.

In capitalistic countries wealth is created,not stolen. Entrepreneurs have an idea, have a relatively free political infrastructure, have access to capital,are willing to take risks,and create a business. They either crash and burn or succeed. If they succeed they create jobs and wealth. They also create wealth for the entrepreneur. Congratulations. Where else do jobs come from?

If you look at the data the Boston Consulting Group provides, the reasons for the disparity are pretty obvious:

The U.S. continues to lead the world in millionaires, with 5.2 million millionaire households, followed by Japan with 1.5 million millionaire households, China with 1.1 million and the U.K. with 570,000. Singapore leads the world in “millionaire density”, or the percentage of millionaires, with 15.5% of its population now millionaire households.

The less free the country,the more the concentration of wealth. History has shown that the freer the economy, the more widely wealth is distributed. The freer the country the more capital is created and available for investment. The freer the country, the more there is incentive for entrepreneurs which gives rise to a lively wealth and job creating society.

Which way is the U.S. going?

As the late, great James Brown said, “I got mine, don’t worry about his”.